jared@protoscript.net


C# 3.0 - Shock and Awe · 2005-09-19

I haven’t spent a lot of time reviewing C# 3.0, but to say that it has left me pleasantly surprised would be an understatement. A better descriptor might be: “Shock and Awe”.

It looks like C# will some day include:

Believe me; I am aware that MS often fails to provide promised features in many of their products. Regardless, I am excited that Microsoft has apparently recognized the usefulness of these features. Even if all of these features make it into C# 3.0, it will still be lacking in flexibility and power compared to languages that have been available for decades. But when compared to C# 1.0, these features are truly shocking.

[See The LINQ Project Overview (.DOC format) for more information.]

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Comment

  1. If any of my (multitude of) readers is aware of any examples that make use of Expression Trees or articles that discuss them, I would really, really appreciate your adding a comment describing and/or linking to it.

    Thanks so much!
    Jared Nuzzolillo    Sep 19, 12:49pm    #
  2. If you like these things Nemerle might be your ballpark.
    Erik Arvidsson    Sep 19, 3:29pm    #
  3. Hey Erik; thanks for the advice.

    I am less excited about the features themselves and more excited about these developments in C# for two reasons:

    # Microsoft is admitting that these features are helpful. When I try to convince someone why, eg, a simple closure syntax is beneficial, it will be easier if MS is behind the idea.

    # When I am forced to use a “commercial language” at work (which is most of the time), it won’t be quite as painful as MS starts implementing these features that I am already used to using in my free time.

    I am passingly familiar with Nemerle already; it seems to be a really nicely designed language, but I generally favor dynamically typed languages (Ruby, javascript, Io etc). I haven’t really spent enough time writing “functional” code to know whether I would prefer to use it. The same goes for a statically typed language with good type inference. Maybe I should write a short project in Nemerle just to get the hang of it.

    Lately, I have been playing around with Squeak/Seasise and just a little with Lisp. Developing applications with Seaside is a real pleasure, but I think my heart belongs to Io and Ruby, at least for now.

    Have you seen Io ? It’s really impressive!
    Jared Nuzzolillo    Sep 20, 9:30am    #
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